TheDailyMeal.com: America's Most Sugary Cereals

7. (Tie) Quaker Oats Oh!s

44 percent sugar (15.6 grams of sugar per 35-gram serving) Equivalent of 3.9 packets of sugar This cereal replaced the apostrophe with an exclamation point when it debuted in the 1980s, a move that looks fine on the box but doesn’t exactly translate to grocery lists. (Credit: Quaker Oats) Click Here For The Full Story from TheDailyMeal.com

More from this Slideshow

44 percent sugar (15.6 grams of sugar per 35-gram serving) Equivalent of 3.9 packets of sugar This cereal replaced the apostrophe with an exclamation point when it debuted in the 1980s, a move that looks fine on the box but doesn’t exactly translate to grocery lists. (Credit: Quaker Oats) Click Here For The Full Story from TheDailyMeal.com

44 percent sugar (15.6 grams of sugar per 35-gram serving) Equivalent of 3.9 packets of sugar The Cap’n (formally known as Horatio Magellan Crunch) launched his maiden voyage to our kitchen cabinets in 1963. It’s difficult to navigate the vast ocean of breakfast cereals without seeing the Cap’n’s influence; it has more spin-offs than most other popular brands. (Credit: flickr/ litlnemo) Click Here For The Full Story from TheDailyMeal.com

45 percent sugar (15.7 grams of sugar per 35-gram serving) Equivalent of 3.9 packets of sugar This is one of the newer additions to the breakfast cereal lexicon (introduced in 2003) and it's unabashedly sugary: it essentially calls itself a dessert you put milk on and feed your children in the morning. Amen to truth in advertising. (Credit: flickr/ Runs With Scissors) Click Here For The Full Story from TheDailyMeal.com

47 percent sugar (16.4 grams of sugar per 35-gram serving) Equivalent of 4.1 packets of sugar Introduced in 1997, All Berries finally freed us from the dark ages when one had to actually take the time to pour a bowl of Crunch Berries and remove all those unwanted, non-berry pieces. Say what you will about his nutritional knowledge; the Cap’n sure knows how to get inside kids’ heads. (Credit: flickr/ theimpulsivebuy) Click Here For The Full Story from TheDailyMeal.com

48 percent sugar (16.9 grams of sugar per 35-gram serving) Equivalent of 4.2 packets of sugar It seems one of the go-to moves in the cereal industry is to take your existing product and add marshmallows to it. Marshmallows are to prepackaged cereals as bacon is to everything else. (Credit: flickr/ dasmart) Click Here For The Full Story from TheDailyMeal.com

52 percent sugar (18.1 grams of sugar per 35-gram serving) Equivalent of 4.5 packets of sugar This cereal hit the market as Sugar Crisp in 1949 and has since changed its name (but not its sugar content). However, the mascot still goes by the name Sugar Bear. (Credit: thejrexperiment.com) Click Here For The Full Story from TheDailyMeal.com

55 percent sugar (19.4 grams of sugar per 35-gram serving) Equivalent of 4.9 packets of sugar Here’s the kingpin of granulated goodness. This product was introduced in 1953 under the name Sugar Smacks, then it was renamed Honey Smacks, then just Smacks and now, it’s back to Honey Smacks. You could probably call them almost anything; kids "dig 'em" for the taste, not the name. With the equivalent of nearly five packets of sugar and two Krispy Kreme glazed donuts per 35-ounce serving, it's the most sugary cereal currently on the market. (Credit: flickr/ theimpulsivebuy) Click Here For The Full Story from TheDailyMeal.com